Hi,
I am keen to learn basics about portrait photography. Is there a good book that I can pickup and learn some basics?
Thanks in advance
Hi,
I am keen to learn basics about portrait photography. Is there a good book that I can pickup and learn some basics?
Thanks in advance
firstly, start by joining in here on AP, we have a heap of skilled portrait photographers that are willing to give guidance, so start posting some of your work and learn from the feedback.
Next, for lighting there is one site that is brilliant for this : http://strobist.blogspot.com/
there are also workshops you can do, so check out what is happening in Melbourne and you are likely to find a weekend workshop in portraiture that will help you along the way.
As for books, they can teach you some of the theory, but ultimately you need to get your camera and lights out and practice, practice, practice, what you learn from AP, books ,and courses. There is no easy path, other than doing it over and over, and learning from your results, good and bad.
Last edited by ricktas; 24-10-2011 at 8:38pm.
"It is one thing to make a picture of what a person looks like, it is another thing to make a portrait of who they are" - Paul Caponigro
Constructive Critique of my photographs is always appreciated
Nikon, etc!
RICK
My Photography
Thanks for the prompt reply,
I am not expecting it to be an easy path, but I needed a place to start. I do want to learn theory/basics and that was the reason I was looking for a book or a dvd or something similar.
I was looking for a book that would tell me basics like what lens to use, focal length? ISO setting? How to select correct WB etc?
Thanks in advance.
These are basic photography skills, not portrait ones. I think you need to start even further back, if you need to understand which focal length, ISO etc to use for any given genre. With a good basic understanding of what Aperture, ISO, shutter speed and white balance do, you will automatically know some of the answers to your questions.
Click on Library on the main menu here on AP, and then have a look at the New To Photography section.
Last edited by ricktas; 24-10-2011 at 9:25pm.
I have to agree with Rick - think of portraiture as a specialty. You really need to know all of those basics first then you grow upon those skills. I would buy a book first that teaches you those basic skills and once you have a good understanding of them then move onto a portrait book which don't usually give you a lot of information about the things you mentioned but tend to elaborate more on posing your models and lighting setups.
CAMERA: Nikon D800, Nikon D7000
LENSES: AF Nikkor 50mm f/1.8, Tamron SP AF 90mm F/2.8 Macro, Sigma 10 - 20mm F/4 - 5.6, Sigma 150 - 500mm F/5 - 6.3 APO DG OS, Nikkor 18 - 200mm F/3.5 - 5.6 VRII,
Sigma 70 - 200mm f/2.8 APO EX DG OS, Tamron SP 24 - 70mm f/2.8 Di VC USD, Sigma 85mm F/1.4 EX DG, Nikkor AF-S 16-35mm F/4 ED VR, Nikkor AF-S 200-500 f/5..6E ED VR
MY WEBSITES: www.nawimages.com, http://nelliewajzerphotography.smugmug.com/, http://NellieWajzerPhotography.blogspot.com
Thanks Ricktas and Nellie,
I truly appreciate your feedback. I have ordered couple of books to understand the basics of Photography
1) Understanding Exposure by Bryan Peterson
2) Canon EOS Digital Photography Photo Workshop by Serge Timacheff
I hope these books give me the basics of handling my Canon and give me confidence to shoot in other modes. Right now I shoot most of my pics in Aperture Priority and tyr my best to keep the background out of focus.
I hope to be confident enough to shoot in Manual mode after reading these books.
My Kit:
Canon 450D
18-55mm f/3.5-5.6
55-250mm f/4.0-5.6
I will buy faster lens when I get comfortable with my kit, I want faster lens to shoot indoor low light.
50mm f1.4
100mm f2.8 Maco
and I need something in 30mm range as well.
Questions
========
Do you guys think I am going the right direction?
Do you have any experience with the book that I am getting?
Any suggestions/comments regarding the lens that I am looking to buy? I won't be looking to get these lens in a months time.
Regards,
Sri
Understanding exposure is a good book
There are lots of online tutorials on YouTube too
But I think best thing to start with is simply natural light, get that sorted before studio lighting
Darren
Gear : Nikon Goodness
Website : http://www.peakactionimages.com
Please support Precious Hearts
Constructive Critique of my images always appreciated
Understanding exposure is (as Kiwi says) a good book to get your head around ISO, Shutter speed and Aperture and how they all inter-relate. Certainly by reading that book and doing the tasks it suggests, you will get a very good understanding of the basics of photography and how to get the result you want.
Also start posting photos for critique here on AP. Members will happily give you good advice on how to improve the technical, composition and subject of your photos and make them connect with the viewers more.
Have a look at this while you're waiting for your books.....http://dryreading.com/camera/index.html
It should only take you a couple of minutes to figure out how to use it.
Thanks Kiwi, Ricktas and Keefy
Appreciate your feedback.
Kiwi,
I will start with natural light only, till I get comfortable.
I will read these books and post some pics for cc. Would you guys think that the Glass that I am looking at are good for the purpose ?
Regards
If you're doing studio work even the 18-55 will suffice. Don't think about the gear yet. Understand the basics of photography first. If you truely understand, you'll quickly realise what kind of gear you'll need. Meanwhile save some $$. Well LOTS of $$. If you're going to do your own studio setup a decent setup will cost you easily $3.5K.
Lots of people who get their first DSLR aspire to be a professional photographer. Whilst i do encourage you to dream, i also do encourage you to search the ausphotography forums as "going professional" has been covered many many many times and more often than not it's still a dream for most. It's harder than it seems and much costlier than what people are prepared to outlay initially. Probably will spend in excess of $5k for a basic kit of 2 bodies, lenses and strobes and possibly still not earn a single cent from the "investment". People are disillusioned by all the glamour of being a photographer and most of the time don't see the hardship in it.
Good luck with your dreams and foray into photography You'll need it. Stick around, there's lots to be learnt from AP (australian photography).
EDIT: http://www.ausphotography.net.au/for...l-Photographer <<< good place to start to have an idea what a business entails.
Last edited by KeeFy; 25-10-2011 at 9:50pm.
Thanks Keefy,
Appreciate your prompt reply.
I need to set few thing very straight, I might not have been clear about my expectations.
1) I do realize that becoming a photographer require lots of hard work, like any other profession.
2) I am not aspiring to be a professional photographer.
3) I do want to be a good hobby photographer, I want to take some good pictures of my family and friends.
I do want to pursue photography as a hobby but not as a profession
Regards
leanneqld,
Thanks for your input.
Is there any particular channel that I need to subscribe to in YouTube that you would recommend ?
G'day forteja
I note that you're melbourne based
Many years ago I cut my teeth with portraiture stuff at the Melbourne Camera Club's portraiture group
I suggest that -as well as the suggestions above- that you pop into their clubrooms one night and see what they do
Regards, Phil
Of all the stuff in a busy photographers kitbag, the ability to see photographically is the most important
google me at Travelling School of Photography
images.: flickr.com/photos/ozzie_traveller/sets/